article

Technological change and child behavior among the !Kung

Ethnology27 • Published In 1988 • Pages: 339-365

By: Draper, Patricia, Cashdan, Elizabeth A..

Abstract
The source examines how changes in subsistence economy has affected child behavior and relations between parents and children among the !Kung San of Western Botswana. The authors' investigation is based on comparative observations of child play and behavior and child-adult interactions in two groups of !Kung San, one a sedentary group living in several villages in the !Kangwa Valley and practicing a mixed economy of gardening, stock raising, and gathering and the other a nomadic hunting and gathering group occupying the area in the vicinity of the Namibia-Botswana border. The authors show that the adoption of sedentary life and the attending changes in economic activities are associated with changes in the social interaction between parents and children and between children and their peers.
Subjects
Theoretical orientation in research and its results
Cultural participation
Child care
Childhood activities
Status of children
culture
San
HRAF PubDate
2005
Region
Africa
Sub Region
Southern Africa
Document Type
article
Evaluation
Creator Type
Ethnologist
Document Rating
5: Excellent Primary Data
Analyst
Gerald Reid ; 1988
Field Date
1968-1969
Coverage Date
1968-1969
Coverage Place
!Kwanga and Duda areas, Botswana
Notes
By Patricia Draper and Elizabeth Cashdan
Includes bibliographical references (p. 362-365)
LCCN
64005713
LCSH
San (African people)